![]() She struggles with the sheer enormity of the idea: "Actually, my head was starting to hurt from all these thoughts." It's not until Uma's grandmother notices her shoes that Uma can make infinity her own: "y love for her was as big as infinity." Hosford's (Big Bouffant) story is as much a look into the interior life of a sensitive girl as it is a meditation on a mathematical concept a task for which Swiatkowska's (This Baby) idiosyncratic portraits are perfectly suited. Umas struggle with the meaning of infinity offers readers. "How many stars were in the sky? A million? A billion? Maybe the number was as big as infinity." Friends, teachers, and family give Uma new ways to think about infinity as an endless succession of ancestors, or as a noodle cut in half and in half again (Swiatkowska draws Uma cutting a python-sized noodle with a knife, demonstrating that things can become infinitely small, too). by Kate Hosford & illustrated by Gabi Swiatkowska RELEASE DATE: Oct. ![]() ![]() Dark-haired Uma sits wide-eyed in her backyard under a black, star-studded sky, torn between the charm of her new red shoes and the overwhelming size of the universe. ![]()
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